Cheka Since the early 1920s, the monastery complex was occupied by Soviet invaders. Shepetivsky BUPR (hereinafter referred to as Izyaslavsky BUPR) and a Special Department of the Cheka-GPU are located in the monastery buildings. The so-called "troika", an out-of-court sentencing organ, met directly in prison. Such memory of the formation of the logic of the
Red Terror in the Bernardine monastery was left by the peasant P. Tymchyk from the village
Dvirets:
Slippery mold in the corners of the prison, cold and wild. We, the arrested, are kicked out of the cells and forced to undress. High Jew walked around us and for fun hit the ramrod on his bare backs. During the interrogations, we were starved to death and beaten. It is remembered back in 1930. Every night, Jew Telishevsky was taken out of the cell by one of the arrested and shot. We heard gunshots, death cries.A heart trembled, tears fell from eyes. The question is: what are the sufferings for? Are we criminals? Are we, gray workers, enemies of the people? » The Iziaslav prison of the Red Terror era was also reflected in the poetry of the Ukrainian poet Mykola Bolkun. On the eve of the
German-Soviet War, experiments were conducted in the walls of the prison, and toxic and psychotropic drugs were tested. With the onset of the German offensive, NKVD staff and officers escaped by leaving "patients" at the mercy.
Gestapo During the German occupation of 1941–1943, the complex of the former Bernardine monastery was used by the
Gestapo. In particular, members of the Zaslav anti-Nazi group, Mykhailo Masheruk, were imprisoned, some of whom were tortured, some were shot.
Iziaslav Children's Labor Colony After the war, a labor colony for about 200 "juvenile offenders" was located in the monastery walls. In reality, these were the children of the "enemies of the people." Since 1954, the labor colony has been a secret site, reporting directly to Moscow. Until 1958, the head of the supervisory service of the Iziaslav Children's Labor Colony of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in the Khmelnytsky region was Alexey Devyatov, one of the executors of mass shootings of Polish POWs in the Putivl camps in 1940.
MX 324/58 Correctional Institution, founded in 1960, became known throughout the USSR in a short time as one of the most severe criminal prisons. Until 1965, the prison was used by Soviet special services to carry out secret executions of political prisoners. ''«This camp has a long history and has been one of the most lawless in the Union. It was told that a person's life was worth a pack of cigarettes and a pack of tea. The authorities were destroying the dissenters by bribing the other prisoners, through a deliberate misconception that caused a big fight and massacre. At the same time, they constantly terrorized prisoners by imposing disciplinary penalties, for example. confinement to the solitary isolator. Therefore, people were spiritually broken and began to cooperate with the administration, or seriously ill, and then did not cause any interest in the leadership.»'' – recounts one of the former prisoners in Iziaslav. In 1972, during excavation work, a treasure was found in the territory of the former monastery, which consisted of church utensils: gold bowls, silver trays, medallions, pendants, gold chains, plates, crosses with precious stones. Subsequently, the treasure was taken to the capital of the USSR, Moscow. It is known that dissidents Petro Saranchuk, Serhiy Babich, Olexiy Murzhenko, Leonid Schreyer were in captivity at different times. The last two were released from prison only in 1987, four years before the collapse of the USSR.
«I saw the faces of the prisoners of this camp. – Olexiy Murzhenko mentioned. – ''However, to say – saw the face, then to say nothing. It was a dream come true – like having a horrible, fantastic dream like Goffman's or
Goya's Capriccio. We walked through the courtyards, a monastery in front of us; to the right of two hundred meters, was a two-story brick building, surrounded by a metal fence about two meters high. Behind this lattice stood there was a long bench of people in striped robes. As I later learned (though I guessed right away), they were prisoners "on the way to a сorrection", for which they were kept in an open barrack. Such privilege is possible after serving a third of the term. Other captives were held in locked cells. I was full of curiosity waiting for the meeting. At that moment, by my feelings, I was obviously very close to the pioneers, the great travelers of
Miklouho-Maclay,
Marco Polo or Livingston!! What kind of land are they, and who and who they are? What to expect from the upcoming meeting? And here the boat touched the bottom, the traveler goes ashore and slowly, embarrassingly goes towards the crowd of natives. He already distinguishes their faces ... Here are the first faces of the prisoners who fell into the lattice. They seemed strange to me. I thought it was stokers who threw coal in the fire in the firebox and went out to look at the stage. But here I go and see the same as if covered with coal dust, burned with fire, exhausted by the forced labor of the face.''
I was stunned to go on and see all the same masks, as if from a horror movie. These masks did not have individual uniqueness, these strange faces were like one mask. I could only notice the common features inherent in all the prisoners behind the metal bars: the rough, the inanimate, and not just the inanimate, but as if intimidated and lost – their features did not radiate the inherent personality of a normal person of spirituality, but aroused in imagination only teddy bears. » DEC 58 – Monastery Due to the horrific conditions of detention and cruel treatment of prisoners, the institution of the Ukrainian penitentiary system Castle Correctional Colony № 58 (names in the criminal world: Monastery, White Swan) is permanently mentioned in human rights and media discourses. It is said that the pubs of the former monastery have a cell and 64 single cells, as well as 62 cells in the former stables, which created incompatible conditions with health and life. Consequently, it triggers protests from convicts who develop into conflicts with the prison administration [45]. At least two similar situations of pressure and coercion of convicts in parliamentary and presidential elections are known. However, in 2007, the conflict went beyond the prison, causing inconvenience in using mobile communication for residents of the entire city. In 2008, in the building of the former church of St. Michael, the parish of the Virgin Mary "Desperate Last Hope" was founded. In July 2009, the protest of prisoners against the horrific conditions of detention and abuse was repeated. On 1 July 2010, the
European Court of Human Rights ruled in the case of «Davydov and Others vs Ukraine». The Court found that in the period 2001–2002 there were four violations of Article 3 of the Convention (prohibition of torture and ill-treatment), Article 8 § 1 (right to respect for correspondence), Article 13 (
right to an effective remedy), Article 34 (right individual complaints), as well as the inability to provide the necessary conditions for the hearing of the case, in accordance with Article 38 § 1 (a), concerning persons who at that time were serving sentences in PEC № 58. The case of Davydov and Others vs Ukraine has revealed one of the most egregious human rights abuses in Ukraine. It is a question of working out of fighting skills by militia special units of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Ukraine on persons serving sentences in prisons. Following the abolition of the death penalty in Ukraine, Sector No. 58 created a sector for holding more than one hundred life-long prisoners. Pastoral work with convicts and employees of the colony is carried out by the UGCC chaplains. ==References==